Biking up to the Gap of Dunloe
This is the past few weeks' entries --
20-22 July
(This is a trip that Rick Wilber does annually, to Scotland or
Ireland, offering a college-credit writing workshop combined
with a literary tour. It's co- sponsored, this year, by his University
of South Florida and the University of Limerick. If you're interested
in attending some year, please contact Rick at RWilber@Tampabay.rr.com)
Gay and I rented a car and took off the morning of 20 July to
drive to the Tampa Airport -- cheaper than parking for three
weeks -- and the 25 of us gathered there and took off for Newark.
There we found that Gay and I had an earlier plane than the others,
so we went off to Merrie Olde. Movie on the plane didn't work,
but otherwise it was uneventful. Traveled into the premature
dawn, getting to Gatwick before 6 a.m. Walked through customs
and got on a train to London.
(Cost us a little extra, since the package rate included a bus
ride into the city, but it was worth it for the speed and comfort
of the train, and not having to wait around Gatwick for a couple
of hours.)
I explored the neighborhood around the hotel (in Islington) and
Gay rested for awhile, and we met the others when they came in.
Went off with Rick to a fish & chips place I'd seen that
looked promising. It was fine, plaice for me and shad roe for
Gay.
We wandered and rested and went off in the evening to join Judith
Clute at a Greek restaurant in Camden Town, Andy's. Superb souvlaki.
Judith and I killed a bottle of retsina, which Gay declined.
Somehow she thinks it tastes like solvent.
Up early the next morning, when all 25 met with Judith at the
Blackfriars tube stop for a tour of Shakespeare's London, insofar
as it can be reconstructed. We wound up at the reconstructed
Globe about eleven, and took our tired feet into a nice old pub
called the Anchor nearby. They didn't have food, but most of
us were satisfied with a pint.
We went with Rick and the others on to a boat ride down the Thames
to Westminster Abbey, but we'd been there, so Gay and Judith
and I headed off for the new Tate Modern gallery, stopping for
a sandwich on the way.
The Tate Modern is huge, inside and out. There's a sculpture
gallery that holds pieces several stories high, and that was
the most interesting part. "Maman" by Louise Bourgeoise
is a huge black metal spider with eggs.
The place was really crowded, it being a free museum on a Saturday
afternoon. We took a lift up to the fifth floor, thinking to
work our way down. As it turned out, we were pretty worn out
after the one floor.
The theme was the nude, and it was interesting, if predictably
pomo pretentious. In the hundreds of pieces, there was not one
spark of female beauty or of plain sensuality or sexuality. It
was all about pain and isolation and anger. One large dark room
had nothing but a continuous-reel movie of a naked man jumping
up and down with no expression on his face. An icon of sexual
apathy, I suppose.
Having survived that, we called it a day and crossed the Thames
to check out a pub, the Blackfriars, that Judith had shown us
in the tour. It was wedge-shaped, reminiscent of the Flatiron
Building in New York, built in Victorian times and wonderfully
rich and rococo in decoration.
We went back to the Clutes' flat and marveled at their redecoration,
and then went out to a nice Portuguese restaurant, the Camacheira,
a few blocks away. The traditional vinho verde and a stewed chicken
dish. Came back to the Clutes' to download and answer urgent
email.
Next installment, off to Ireland.
Joe
23 July -- London to Dublin
We piled aboard a tour bus to go across the country, through
Wales, to Holyhead, where we would hop aboard a ferry and be
in Dublin by mid-afternoon, early enough to do some wandering.
But the travel gods did not smile on us.
About 11:30, we stopped at Chester, a picturesque little town
with a Roman wall and amphitheater. We'd planned to spend an
hour and a half there, but inexplicably were running an hour
late. So we took a gander at the wall and amphitheater and got
back on the bus at noon. Still plenty of time to get to the ferry
by three.
Well, if there hadn't been any road construction or traffic jams,
we might have made it. We didn't, so we had to hang around Holyhead
until the next ferry, at six. There's not much to it but the
ferry; you can see the whole town in fifteen minutes. I bought
a copy of _Bizarre_, an eponymous magazine, and read it in a
pub.
The ferry was a high-speed catamaran, large enough for a thousand
people. Gay and I wandered around before launch and actually
found a classy restaurant. We made reservations for six at 6:30
and went out to find four hungry people. We found five, no problem,
and enjoyed a decent meal (hot chicken curry for me) with good
French wine.
At the port of Don Loaghaire we boarded buses to city centre
Dublin. It was pretty late by the time we checked into the hotel,
but Gay and I went with Rick and his friend Randy to walk a mile
or so down the River Liffey, to cross theHa'penny Bridge ( a
pretty Victorian footbridge) and dive into a fine pub for our
first pint of Guinness. Second pint, too, for some of us.
The next morning we took a train across Ireland to Limerick.
It was a pleasant enough ride, if short on amenities. By the
time we were ready to eat the upholstery, a snack cart appeared.
No beer or wine, but it did have a chicken and dressing sandwich.
I got one just for the novelty of eating a bread sandwich.
When we got to Limerick there were four large taxis waiting to
take us to the university. There was the expected screw-up; en
route our cab got a radio call saying they needed another cab,
but none was available. I think the dispatcher hopped in a cab
and went down to the station.
The University of Limerick has a large, modern, sprawling campus.
In the normal school year it has ten or twelve thousand students.
In the summer it's a motley bunch including us and hundreds of
young people from Italy and Spain, here to learn how to speak
English with an interesting accent.
We got keys to our dorm rooms, small but quite nice, much better
than I ever had in school. Each cluster of four upstairs rooms
has a kitchen and living room downstairs, and two bathrooms.
The university served up an elegant banquet lunch -- the mid-day
meal is the main one here -- and we wandered around the campus
a bit. Huge library with an acre of computer stations. A central
student center with bookstore, laundry, bank, fast and slow food
joints, and two pubs!
In the evening we went to a reception and the official opening
of the workshop, with an interesting rambling talk by novelist
Niall Williams, about how he got started and how he conducts
his writing life. I enjoyed talking with him, a fascinating guy
who is somewhat of a hermit while writing, but is otherwise sociable
and travels a lot. He couldn't stick around, though; he had to
go home and care for his wife. They'd just come from hiking in
Washington state; on the last day she'd fallen and broken her
ankle, and so got to fly a third of the way around the planet
in severe pain, her leg immobilized.
After the reception we tried out the student pubs and found them
satisfactory.
24-28 July -- Limerick
I have to combine a few days here, or I'll never catch up ...
We had a big reading one night, five of us reading fifteen to
thirty minutes apiece, and almost everybody in the audience stayed
awake, in spite of having been served wine beforehand.
I taught classes on writing short stories and about how books
get published, or not. Enjoyed sitting in on a few other classes,
like Rick Wilber's discussion of the "publishing pyramid" --
the unwritten but quite real caste system among writers, as seen
by publishers. A Joyce Carol Oates can write for F&SF, how
amusing ... but a science fiction writer tries to crack the New
Yorker? Not funny.
The second evening we went into town to see the play _Pigtown_,
a fascinating though oblique history of Limerick in the twentieth
century. The accents were not easy to follow, and if you didn't
know anything of Irish history you would have been fairly lost.
But it was tremendously energetic, with a lot of physical humor,
as it moved from the turn of one century to the next.
Our third day was totally free of teaching. Rick borrowed a car
and we went out to Foynes to see the Flying Boat Museum. The
flying boats were sort of like the Pony Express -- really important
for a few years, and then immediately made obsolescent by technology.
But they were beautiful big old machines, romantic artifacts
of the thirties.
We also went to the little town of Glin, where Rick has set the
novel he's working on (which also has the flying boats). He was
pleased to find that the real town was pretty close to the one
he's been writing about, and got all kinds of local-color details
to incorporate.
We spent an interesting, sort of riotous, afternoon and day at
Bunratty, a town built around a medieval castle. When the runway
at nearby Shannon airport was to be extended, there was a small
old village in the way; instead of bulldozing it, they moved
the cottages up, brick by brick, to make a Williamsburg-type
park around the castle. It's like a village around 1900, with
hardware store, pubs, sweet shop, and so forth. Very pleasant,
not too hokey. There was a driving rainstorm, but we negotiated
our way through it.
The castle was finished in 1425, plundered a few times, and restored
in 1954 to "medieval splendor." We spent a couple of
hours wandering around its interesting rooms, a sort of museum
of everyday life in those times. Then we went to a pseudo-medieval
banquet, eat with your fingers and a dagger (indistinguishable
from a steak knife) and wash it down with plenty of wine. Good
soup and ribs and chicken, fresh bread and decent wine. Serving
wenches, scrubbed inauthentically clean, who also provided song.
A harpist and a truly fine violinist doing period work.
We had an evening walk around the "Angela's Ashes" part
of Limerick, conducted by a contemporary of Frank McCourt's.
Almost nothing is left of the slums that McCourt grew up in;
Limerick is Ireland's computer center, prosperous and growing
fast. The guide's patter summed up the book, and was more entertaining
and much _shorter_.
Yesterday I spent the morning painting a ruined tower about a
mile from the campus. In the afternoon, we had a pleasant boat
ride through the country and a leisurely dinner at a rural pub.
I had Irish stew, a delicious mess of lamb and vegetables, with
potatoes of course on the side, to cut up and stir into the thick
broth.
Five of us spent the evening chatting with P.A., the conference
organizer, at her comfortable home out in the country.
We're leaving this morning for Galway. I have a one-hour window
to get to the library and claim one of the computers, so I'd
better get down there and join the crowd waiting.
Joe
29-31 July -- Galway
In Limerick we met Mike O'Connor, a college professor who moonlights
in the summer as a tour bus guide, and piled aboard his bus for
the long trip to Galway. We made the obligatory stop at the Cliffs
of Moher, which are breathtaking -- a 700-foot drop straight
into an angry ocean, miles long. Gay and I just missed seeing
a huge chunk of cliff fall into the water -- we heard the splash
and saw the cloud of mist that was its aftermath. It happens
frequently enough to require posted warnings ... dangle your
feet over the edge and the rest of your life may be exciting,
if short.
We had an excellent fish 'n' chips lunch at Lahinch, a beach
town that's also a golfing mecca, and then drove through the
Burren, a sterile moonscape about which Cromwell said there wasn't "wood
enough to hang a man, nor water enough to drown him, nor earth
enough to bury him in."
It was lovely weather in Galway, and Gay and I checked in to
an unexpectedly fine hotel room in the Jurys Inn, overlooking
the River Corrib with its swans and weirs. We wandered the streets
for a couple of hours, touristy but charming. There's a strange
indoor mall built around ancient city walls, giving out to a "medieval
avenue" that looks exactly like the dealers' room at a fantasy-oriented
sf convention.
The weather was so nice we decided to eat outdoors, at Blake's,
one of Rick's favorite places, right next door to the hotel.
It's a good thing we were close, because right after the drinks
came, so did the monsoon.
It was comical. There was an awning protecting the al fresco
customers, but it wasn't big enough. The rain came in at near-hurricane
force and cascaded down the awning onto the people seated on
the outside edge of the table, who were given umbrellas. There
were no inside tables to move to, so waitresses scurried outside
with umbrellas more or less protecting the food.
I ate standing up, in a narrow lane that didn't have water falling
directly on it. The food was delicious. I had a thing of crab
and prawns drowning in cheese sauce, accompanied by delicate
boiled potatoes, a thousand calories on the hoof, or claw.
We hooked up with a bunch of students and went pub-crawling,
the rain having abated to a normal thunderstorm. Spent a couple
of hours in a noisy friendly place. I established a sort of dubious
credential -- the bartender made a mystery drink for Justin,
one of the students, and he asked me to taste it ... I said it
was vodka, orange juice, Curacao, and apricot brandy or liqueur,
and it turns out I was right. Don't ask me who the eighteenth
president was, though, or the atomic number of ruthenium. We
all have our areas of expertise.
On 30 July we drove out into the mountains of Connemara, stopping
on the way to tour a small marble factory, which was fascinating.
They can slice marble thin enough to use as translucent windows.
We picked up some gifts.
Passed through a lot of scenery and rain. It cleared long enough
for us to spend a half hour exploring a peat bog, which was kind
of eldritch, thinking about the Peat Man they found a few years
ago. You can take a misstep and slide in over your head, and
be preserved for centuries in the anaerobic environment just
below the pillowy grass.
We had a good lunch at the Benedictine nuns' chow house at Kylemore
Abbey, a place with a complex history involving Nile River fever,
the German invasion of Belgium in WWI, buried treasure, and various
dukes and earls. Now a school for girls and a huge tourist trap
to fill the coffers of the pope. Or at least the order.
A mile from the abbey, there's a walled Victorian garden that's
in the process of being restored. Lots of interesting and sometimes
bizzare plants, alongside a large vegetable garden that supplies
some of the nuns' food.
We came back to Galway through the rain, and although it was
clear when we went out to dinner, we'd wised up and ate indoors.
Went with Rick and his family back to Blake's -- we might have
gone farther, but 9-year-old Samantha was tired and wanted pizza
-- and had another excellent meal, this time a spicy seafood
curry for me, with a nice half-bottle of Gewurtztraminer.
The next morning we bussed out to the ferry that goes to the
Aran Islands, a good swift ride across the open Atlantic for
about an hour. We landed at Inishmore, the largest of the islands,
and piled onto minibusses for a minitour.
Inishmore is one of the weirdest places I've ever seen. It's
only five or six miles long, but claims to have 7000 miles of
stone wall, and I believe it. The island started out as plain
rock, and the inhabitants have, over the centuries, built up
a few inches of topsoil by pulverizing rock and mixing it with
chopped seaweed and manure. They cleared the island of loose
rocks by building a patchwork quilt of walls enclosing small
holdings.
We visited the Seven Churches ruin, which features the ruins
of four churches (go figure) and a lot of gravestones so old
you can't read the inscriptions. Nine Roman scholars from the
8th century are buried there. A perfect island for aescetics.
The big attraction is the fort, Dun Aengus. They sort of call
it a fort by default, as its actual prehistoric function is not
clear. It's a huge semicircle of walls 18 feet thick and as much
as twelve feet high, enclosing Inishmore's northwest corner,
which is a vertical cliff that drops 300 feet to the sea. Visitors
are warned not to approach the edge too closely; people have
been blown off by the strong winds, and of course none has ever
survived. That didn't deter our students, or yours truly, from
crawling up to the edge and looking over. Scary.
The size of the enterprise makes you wonder what kind of Bronze
Age social organization made it possible to put together the
stonemasonry expertise and the hundreds of thousands of man-hours
it took to quarry the rocks, transport them up a steep hill,
and fit them together so well, without mortar, that they still
form a solid structure two thousand years later. A suggestion
pieced together out of legend and archeology is that this was
the symbolic home or headquarters of a chief who ruled over the
three Aran Islands and part of the mainland, and he exacted labor
as tribute.
We went back down to the port, where a couple of large shops
sell the famous Aran Island wool sweaters. I asked our guide
Mike where the wool came from; I'd seen hundreds of cows on the
island, but a total of five sheep. He said there were lots of
sheep around somewhere, but admitted they were mainly for food;
their wool was coarse. Most of the wool for the sweaters was
imported, a lot of it not even from Ireland. Gay and I bought
a couple of sweaters anyhow; we'd long since worn out the ones
we bought back in '79, in our first trip to Ireland.
Back to Galway to struggle with the cybercafe and have a fine
meal at a nouvelle cuisine joint, the River God (stir-fried pigeon
and duck!), after which we went with a bunch of students to hear
traditional music at a large pub across the river, Monroe's.
It was a fine little band, a lead flautist backed up by a concertina
and a guitar player who was over three hundred pounds of fine
Irish tenor. They were joined in two numbers by a visiting step-dance
troupe, four girls who looked to be about fourteen -- though
dancers do often look younger than they are -- and a boy who
looked barely old enough to frequent a pub. They were tremendously
energetic and precise, clattering away in time to the fast music.
A good finale to the Galway experience. We'll be back!
Joe
1 August -- Killarney
Today was mostly riding the bus through the rain, with one fascinating
and relatively dry stop.
We got off to a late start, one of the students trying to stop
the account on a lost credit card -- that sort of thing doesn't
go swiftly in Ireland -- so we weren't able to make the scheduled
stop at Thoor Ballylee, the tower Yeats lived and wrote in.
We did stop at the nearby Coole Park, where Lady Augusta Gregory,
the _grande dame_ of Irish letters, once had an elegant estate.
The mansion was demolished in the 1922 Civil War, but for more
than thirty years it had been a haven for the literary lights
of its time. Yeats and Shaw and dozens of lesser- known writers
and artists benefited from her hospitality and each other's company
in the pastoral setting. Lady Gregory helped organize the Irish
Literary Revival, which turned its back on England and tried
to de- mythologize Ireland while using Irish myth and folklore
as source material. She was a prolific author, writing forty
plays and dozens of translations from Irish into English, and
was also an assiduous folklorist.
The Visitor's Center there is half about her and half about the
local geology and wildlife. Coole Lake grows from a shallow pond
in the summer to a large deep lake in the fall, draining into
a river that suddenly disappears underground, to reappear in
short stretches here and there on its way to the sea. For most
of its length it's an underground river composed of interlocking
limestone caverns, which dry up during the summer.
We continued on through the rain to Killarney, charming little
town nestled in the mountains. The crowd dispersed to three B&B's
on the outskirts of town. We're only about ten minutes' brisk
walk from the City Centre.
After dropping off our stuff, we walked into town and nosed around
the shops a bit, then stopped at a little restaurant Rick recommended.
He and I both got Shepherd's Pie, a generous portion for £5.75
, which included four different allotropes of potato! Mashed
potato on the pie, chunks of potato in the accompanying vegetable
dish, two boiled potatoes apiece on the side, and a glop of potato
salad in my "side salad." Still making up for the potato
famine, I guess.
We found a cybercafe, slightly expensive at five pounds per hour,
but efficient. I couldn't download my email, because Earthlink
was upgrading its service; I hope it won't take too long.
We walked a few miles through the woods, looking for deer, but
didn't see any. Then went to a pub that advertised traditional
music. The music was sort of disappointing -- they used a computerized
synthesizer for a bass background, just like their ancestors
-- but the Guinness was welcome after the walk.
2 August
We started out the day with the bus stopping at a little laundromat,
whose owners were nonplussed at having twenty-some people troop
in with big bags of laundry. They did promise to have it washed,
dried, and folded by six, so we piled back aboard the bus and
lurched south to do part of "the Ring of Kerry," a
circle of small roads taking in the scenery in the Iveragh Peninsula,
which is more Irish than most of Ireland. Picturesque hamlets,
greener-than-green meadows, dramatic mountain and shore vistas.
(Most of Ireland identifies with "the Celtic Tiger," the
modern country that's joined the EEU and has become so prosperous
that it is obliged to help support less fortunate member nations,
like Portugal.)
We drove through Glen Fleska, a little town with interesting
Victorian shopfronts, to our first stop, the unabashedly touristy
Kenmare. We walked through the soft rain enjoying the impromptu
market set up along one side of the town square, where merchants
hawked souvenirs as well as the usual flea-market fare, like
antique kitchen utensils and brand-name clothing that fell off
a truck somewhere.
The main tourist attraction is the Stone Circle, which is --
surprise & begorrah! -- a circle of stones, about 55 feet
in diameter. The guide book says "it ain't no Stonehenge," which
is true, but it's quietly impressive. Nobody knows what its function
was, though of course the assumption is that it had some religious
or otherwise ceremonial use. The one-paragraph description says
that it dates from somewhere between 2200 and 500 B.C., and may
be "orientated" on the setting sun. The astronomer
in me has to recognize that you could throw a handful of pebbles
on the ground anywhere but the north or south pole, and several
pairs of them would exactly point to the place where the sun
set one day of the year. But in the misting rain, with ghostly
mountains in the background, it was a lovely eldritch sight.
That took about ten minutes of our 90-minute stop, so we relaxed
a bit in a pub and then hit the shops. I hadn't expected to buy
anything but a voltage converter for the computer, but I was
seduced by a teapot, a delicate running- glaze thing with a dragon
for a handle. Along with one matching mug it came to about eighty
bucks, a worthy addition to our collection.
The bus then proceeded up into the mountains, the rain abating
to give us a succession of marvelous views. The mountains were
Appalachian rather than Rocky, but dramatic nevertheless, covered
with green and slashed with glistening waterfalls. We stopped
for lunch at Moll's Gap, a tourist cafeteria that began its existence
as an illegal pub and brothel for the men who put this road through
a hundred or so years ago. There was an impressive angle of the
Gap of Dunloe, where we hoped to be bicycling in a couple of
days.
In the shop I bought an entertaining litttle book, _Stories from
a Kerry Fireside_, by John B. Keane, a locally famous storyteller.
Most of the stories are little rambles a few pages long, like
transcriptions of tales you'd hear from some old guy in a country
pub. Much more entertaining than Frank McCourt, though I doubt
that he made millions off them.
We wound our way downhill and stopped at Torc Falls, for a little
hike uphill to see a moderately interesting waterfall. Some people
went on up the extra half-mile to the top of the falls, but the
trail was muddy and I was being eaten alive by midges, so I went
back to the bus to read.
The last stop was Muckross House, where a succession of rich
people from the 1840's on lived and collected. Lots of impressive
furniture and chandeliers and so forth. (The two chandeliers
present a story in themselves. The one that originally lit the
dining room has glass with so much lead that it appears gray.
This was to keep the thing from swinging in the breeze, dumping
candle wax on everybody. The modern electric chandelier, purchased
in the 1970's, cost 15,000 pounds, which is half what the original
owner paid for the whole house, 130 years before.)
For me the most interesting part of the house was an exhibit
of the watercolors done by Mary Herbert, who was associated with
the house from the Victorian 90's almost to WWII. She painted
all over Europe, from childhood to old age, mostly landscapes
and architecture. She was pretty good at twelve, and damned good
by the time she was thirty, and continued with a high level of
skill and sensitivity for the rest of her life. (She took visitors
to the house on painting expeditions in the surrounding woods,
and at least one complained that she made no consideration for
her guests' comfort, plunging through the sward to find some
particularly interesting tree or lake.) Mr. Herbert died when
she was in her 50's, so she abandoned the big old house and went
back to the scenes of her youth, in Italy and France, painting
up a storm until she died.
Gay and I went into town later and checked email, and then had
a good meal at the Bombay Palace. I had a fiery concoction of
lamb and lentil, a welcome respite from the restrained palette
of the Irish cook. Then we went out to listen to some music --
we followed the sound of close harmony and wound up sitting on
picnic benches in a patio outside a bar, listening to a fine
quintet doing a mixture of Irish and folk and pop. It became
cold, so I got Gay an Irish coffee, and myself a "hot whiskey," which
at home we would call a hot toddy, booze and sugar and hot water,
flavored with lemon and clove. From there we dropped in on Buckley's,
a pub where musicians get together and play for pints and each
other. The music was entirely "trad." There were two
old gents who were evidently accustomed to playing together,
on fiddle and flute, and a good guitarist/tenor, and a kid who
couldn't have been eighteen (he was drinking Seven-up) who quietly
backed up everybody with bass lines from a Roland portable electric
keyboard.
Joe
3 August
The day started out with a scene of arresting beauty. We drove
through a light mist to the small town of Castlemaine, where
a brilliant low rainbow appeared, and it was a storybook one,
starting in the fields to the left of the road, and arching over
to the right, to fall on a cluster of houses that were bright
with sun, with the dark green mountains contrasting behind the
rainbow, making it seem even more brilliant -- how often do you
see a rainbow in front of a mass of land?
We all got out to take pictures, which of course will be only
a ghost of the real thing. As we drove on it became even more
bright, and for a few minutes presented a double bow, the outer
one with colors reversed. (They asked me, as resident scientist,
why that happened. I said "because that's what rainbows
do." Rick said that's what [nine-year-old] Samantha would
say. But I didn't really want to get into refraction and critical
angles. The nice thing about magic is people don't really want
it explained.)
We stopped for a half-hour at Inch Strand, the largest sand beach
in the area. A little cool for wading, but it was pretty, and
there was impressive evidence of how rough the sea had been during
the night, windrows of seaweed far up the beach. There was a
rustic coffeehouse where you could take a cup out to picnic tables
overlooking the sea.
Then about an hour and a half of narrow winding roads, with blessedly
clear weather. Lots of picturesque stone huts and sheep, goats,
cows, horses all grazing within pens defined by fences of piled
stone. We drove by some interesting "beehive" huts
made of stone, which served as shelters for monks on pilgrimage
a thousand years ago and more.
There was a long stand-off with a British driver of a minivan.
He passed a wide spot where he should have pulled over, and slammed
on his brakes in time to not collide with our bus. He made vigorous
gestures indicating that our bus should back up. Mike indicated
that that would be disconcerting to the five or six cars lined
up behind us. Seven, eight. Ten. (Maybe this is an Irish kind
of thing ... the Ring of Kerry isn't one-way, but people who
live in the area know that the only sensible direction to go
is clockwise. If everybody goes clockwise, you don't have these
jams. They don't tell the tourists, of course.) They gestured
back and forth for about fifteen minutes, during which time three
vehicles came up behind the minivan, assessed the situation,
and backed up to pullover spots. He finally did likewise, and
I'm sure spent the rest of the week grumbling about the bloodyminded
Irish. The thirty or so cars stranded behind us might have seen
his license plate and had some words about the bloodyminded Brits.
We stopped for lunch and some education at Blasket Centre, a
modern museum building in the middle of nowhere.
The Blasket Islands comprise a collective ghost town that a hundred
years ago was considered the last bastion of pure Irish culture.
They were peopled by mainland peasants who were tired of being
oppressed by absentee (English, mainly) landlords, and so escaped
to try to grind some sort of living out of the barren offshore
rocks, sharing and bartering. The biggest island, Great Blasket,
is only four miles long and at its peak had only fourteen acres
of farmland.
They fished around the islands out of long rowboats, and gathered
shellfish. Their only export was a small amount of crab and lobster.
Their population declined steadily from 1900 until WWII, children
going off the island for education and not returning. There was
a sad picture of an old woman, slumped in monochrome, with a
quote saying that both her sons and both her daughters had gone
to America, and wouId never return. She had grandchildren she
knew she would never see.
In 1953, the few dozen old people left were evacuated, since
it was obvious that one protracted storm would do them in. Before
that, though, they produced a number of books that are greatly
valued locally as memoirs of an irretrievable past. They are
still required reading for Irish secondary school students. Our
guide Mike said that one of them, _Peig_, was almost universally
despised by people who went to Gaelic summer school, because
they had to read it in Gaelic.
It's an eerie story overall. There's a small enclave of Blasket
survivors in Springfield, Massachusetts, who are constantly beleagured
by linguists and folklorists. Otherwise nothing remains on the
island but the ruins of their huts and a cafe that sometimes
opens when the weather is good, for hikers willing to take the
motorboat out for a day of loneliness. Or a few weeks, if the
weather turns bad.
A few miles down the road we stopped at a remarkable edifice,
the Gallarus Oratory. It's a 1300-year-old triangular prism of "dry
rubble masonry" -- rocks carefully fitted into a high arch,
the whole thing held together purely by gravity. Its dark and
foreboding interior is big enough for only twenty or thirty worshipers
or tourists. Still waterproof after thirteen centuries of Atlantic
storms.
Our last stop of the day was the town of Dingle, a port town
whose current claim to fame is that it was the site of _Ryan's
Daughter_. I had a pint at Dick Mack's, the pub where Robert
Mitchum drank and chainsmoked during the filming, before he succumbed
to lung cancer.
We met the crowd for a so-so dinner at a pub adjoining the Holiday
Inn, but had some success pub-crawling after doing the email.
We heard a guy singing and went into a pub where he was holding
forth solo, really good folk guitar and a mix of Irish and folk
and humorous songs. Willie Burke -- I had to buy his tape after
hearing his song "The Oldest Swinger in Town." Among
jokes about balding and false teeth, he had the line "Now
it takes all night to do what you used to do all night."
The days and nights have been very full in Ireland, but the writing
has been going well. If I can turn in by midnight, I'll be up
before five, and can write a few hundred words on the novel,
and then a few hundred on this, before Mike comes with the bus
at nine.
Joe
4 August
Marvelous day. We rented bikes in the morning and pedaled a couple
of miles to Ross Castle, where we hired a motorboat to take us
the fourteen miles to Lord Brandon's Cottage, actually a little
snack shop at the base of the southernmost of three interconnecting
lakes.
The boat ride was worth it by itself. We hoisted the bikes aboard
and putted out into into the choppy lake. I don't think I've
ever been in a boat with a bike before, and I _know_ I've never
been in a boat with a bike where the boat's pilot was younger
than the bike. The guy let his three-year-old son steer the outboard
across the open water. When he took over to insert the boat into
a narrow passage, the kid threw a tantrum -- mutiny, by God!
The scenery was awesome, mountains surging up on both sides of
the narrow lake, the ride totally placid with the wind blocked
off. We did have one bit of excitement, when the little motor
couldn't make it through the current flowing from Upper Lake
to Middle Lake. We all had to get out and walk along a trail,
while Rick, obviously the strongest, pushed the boat along with
an oar, the little outboard red-lined. Rick said it was a close
one; he was just about played out when the motor finally won
its tug-of-war.
At Lord Brandon's chow house we met with the rest of the group,
who had either hiked up the trail or been carried on horse carts,
which we quickly would learn to hate. Only Rick and Gay and I
had opted for the bike ride, which was rated "strenuous."
The first part of it would have been easy if it weren't for the
damned horsecarts. The road's about as wide as an American car,
and the horsecarts -- hundreds of them -- are about three quarters
as wide. You keep to the left, of course, unless the cart decides
to go on the wrong side. Then you either cut over to the right
or plunge off the road. In some places that would have been fatal.
Of course the road is covered with piles of horse hockey, an
everpresent navigation hazard.
Nevertheless, it was one of the best bike rides I've ever taken.
There's a mile and a half that's a steep zig-zag up the mountain
to the Gap of Dunloe. Rick and I would go about a hundred yards
and stop, panting, until our heart rates came down. Gay was more
sensible and walked her bike up the steepest parts.
Your reward for the effort is a sensational seven-mile downhill
glide, dramatic mountainsides, Alpine valleys, cold still lakes,
and finally meadows. No horsecarts! Too steep and twisty. We
did have to contend with individual horses and riders, which
was not so bad, but also a few horses without riders (evidently
people who sensibly chickened out before the steep decline),
two of which almost did me in when they saw a source of drinking
water, and paid no heed to the tiny organism with a bicycle that
was in its way.
At the bottom of the trail is a welcome Guinness sign, which
I obeyed. Then we pedaled seven miles back into town, unremarkable
except for heavy traffic here and there.
In the evening we had a quick dinner and then went to a performance
called "To Dance on the Moon," a Riverdance-style production
that was perhaps more authentically Irish. (Riverdance, I'm told,
is Irish-American dance, subcategory Chicago.) It was well performed,
with fourteen dancers, two singers, and a substantial band of
authentic Irish intruments -- or at least instruments I couldn't
put a name to.
Wonderful day!
Joe
5 August
This was a "free day"; students and teachers allowed
to do whatever they wanted in Killarney. We three had rented
our bikes for two days, hoping for not-too-rainy weather. We
lucked out; on both days, we had nothing more than a little refreshing
mist.
Rick's aunt Ruth opted to come along with us, and she did fine,
often staying .ahead of Gay. She's pushing eighty, but in great
shape, bicycling five to ten miles a day in hilly Wisconsin.
It was a twenty-mile loop, all but a mile or so on trails. Substitute
your favorite synonym for my overused "beautiful" here
(lovely, gorgeous, pretty, exquisite are the ones offered by
MS Word) -- rolling hills, dark Robin-Hood woods, shimmering
lakes, majestic mountains. I want to come back here for a month
and just bicycle and watercolor.
Our first stop was at the Muckross Abbey, an impressive old ruin
that the guidebooks and tours seem to have overlooked, perhaps
because you can only get there by bike or foot. It was refreshing
not to have any Interpretive Center telling you what to think
about it. Deserted since Cromwell's time, one supposes, it's
a huge old thing hosting a graveyard where they still plant people.
Rick was watching the bikes while we went through it, and he
stuck his head through an opening and did an echo-chamber version
of a spooky Latin response he remembered from choir-boy days.
I answered him with Carpe...De ... um.
I found a catacomb-ish corridor that you had to hunch over to
negotiate, and at the end of it was a tight spiral staircase
chiseled out of the stone, with only a few photons to guide you
up. A little scary, but you could always feel your way back down.
The attic of the place was actually pleasant, open to the sky
and full of tree limbs angling in. I heard Gay and Ruth and called
down to them from my holy height. They asked if there was anything
up there, and I said "Nothing but some rusty chains and
old skeletons." They didn't come check.
A few miles farther down the trail, we stopped at a lovely sand
beach on the lake, and had a picnic of bread, cheese, wine, and
fruit. Fish jumped in the water occasionally, but otherwise it
was placid and .
The next four or five miles was marvelous fun, rolling hills
where you could get up enough speed on the downhill to coast
up the uphill. We caught a glimpse of ruin and took the bikes
about fifty yards off the trail to an odd old stone place, roughly
cylindrical, with several fireplaces and what looked like flues
going up at odd angles.
Two miles more and we got to Dinis Cottage, sort of a required
stop for anyone hiking or biking this trail. It's been in business
since 1842, serving coffee and tea and sandwiches. Soda pop nowadays.
In the distorted old glass, people have been using diamonds to
carve their names for a long time. One that was dated 1860, with
fine Victorian script, said he was from King's Town, which is
what people called Dun Laoghaire before they got rid of the English.
I asked what the old ruin we'd seen was, and they young waitstaff
didn't know, eyebrow piercing obviously affecting her memory.
But an older cook told me he thought it was an ancient copper-smelting
kiln. That would explain the things that looked like flues; they
were channels for the molten copper to drizzle down.
We had about a mile on a crowded road, but then got back on the
trail, to loop back to the B&B. No problem except for a traffic
jam of horsedrawn carts on the approach to Muckross House.
We turned in our bikes and I had a weird cybercafe experience.
I brought in these notes on a 3.5" floppy, but couldn't
find any way to read them. Turns out the place only had one station,
out of 14, that had MS Word -- or any word processor, for that
matter. That station was being used by an Italian woman who didn't
know how to type, hunting and pecking. I went a couple of blocks
through the rain to the other cybercafe, but it was full of people
and smoke, with three people in line for the next opening. So
I went back and watched the Italian gal finish her doctoral dissertation.
Got on the net and off and went across the street to our final
dinner in Killarney, at Bricin, famous for their boxties, the
Irish potato pancake. I'd been looking forward to this for awhile,
primed by having read the recipe. They mix mashed potatoes with
a quantity of flour and baking powder, along with chives and
such, and fry of course in butter.
The boxties were excellent, though I could have used a more interesting
filling. Last year, Rick told me, they had spicy lamb curry.
This time we had to make do with a veggie mix or creamed chicken.
I had the latter, and it was okay but unexciting.
We closed out the evening with a couple of drinks at an elegant
Victorian bar, at the Killarney Park Hotel, where a formally
dressed woman improvised discreet piano under our conversation,
which was of course witty and refined. Especially the limericks.
Joe
7 August --
We had an early train, so went down to breakfast at 6:00. Our
hostess cheerfully prepared full breakfasts, even though she
hadn't gotten in till 3:00. (Great B&B, if you're ever in
Killarney -- the Woodlawn House.)
The bus, driven by Mike's brother since Mike had to take one
of our number to the airport, got us to the train station before
7:00. Some of the students looked very much the worse for wear,
having partied mightily the night before. Rick gave them a stern
warning not to do the same thing the night before we leave Ireland
-- hangovers and jetlag don't mix.
The train from Cork came on time, full of Cork hurling fans bound
for a big match in Dublin. Some of them were a rowdy lot, already
drunk and singing. I found a fairly quiet corner and read sf
for my classes.
When we got to Dublin the rooms weren't ready, so we wandered
off to find lunch. Some of us wound up at the coffee shop in
the Irish Writers Museum. Okay quiche. I didn't need to go to
the museum, since we went last time we were over, but I did buy
some stuff in the bookstore, including a tape of James Joyce
reading selections from his books. Maybe I'll finally understand
_Finnegans Wake_.
In the afternoon, Rick led us on a quick literary/historical
tour of Dublin, from the bullet holes in the Post Office to the
pub where Harold Bloom ate a sandwich. (He noted the irony that
Joyce is now Ireland's favorite son, one of Dublin's biggest
tourist attractions. They hated him when he was inconveniently
alive.)
Dinner at the Judge Roy Bean Saloon, Ireland's only Tex-Mex restaruant.
The food was pretty bland, though I gratefully scarfed up a bunch
of jalepen~os. We hit the internet cafe briefly and then came
back to log in here -- Earthlink has a Dublin access number and
the hotel has American-standard modem plug-ins, so I thought
I could save some money that way. No way. Local phone calls are
35 pence a minute, so I'd be paying about 21 pounds an hour,
instead of the cafe's four or five.
We walked out with Rick in search of a pub associated with the
Abbey theater, but couldn't find it, and settled for a good singer
and a pint of Guinness.
8 Aug --
Weird day from the beginning. I got up feeling tired and saw
by Gay's watch in the bathroom that it was after 6:00! Figured
it was the chlortrimeton I'd taken before turning in. Quick shower,
tea, start to write -- still dead tired. Short nap, get up to
write again -- tired again, nap again, write again. Finally finished
400 words and looked outside, and it was still dark. Impossible.
I checked my watch and it was only 4:30! When I'd looked at Gay's
tiny watch without my glasses, I'd mistaken 1:30 for 6:05.
Worked out fine, though. I got a couple hours' more sleep and
then, at 6:30. took my paints out and did a travel diary painting
of the River Liffey -- incorporating genuine Dublin grime. It
was kind of windy and cold over the river, but I stuck it out
for a couple of hours.
Now off to meet Rick for some more museum- and pub-crawling.
Joe
8 August -- Dublin
After going to the internet cafe (the Globe, on O'Connor, far
and away the best one in Ireland -- lots of fast new machines,
tea and coffee) I caught up with Rick and Gay at the Book of
Kells, which I skipped because I'd seen it recently. Rick showed
the students where to go shopping, the pedestrian-only Grafton
Street, and the three of us took off for the Shelbourne hotel.
The Shelbourne is a central place in Irish history; most of the
meetings of revolutionary cabals took place in its Horseshoe
Bar, which was unfortunately closed, because of a bank holiday.
There's a plaque outside acknowledging that the Irish Constitution
was written within.
We did get a pint and a meal at the Shelbourne's large Victorian
pub, an impressive high-ceilinged place with two larger-than-life
statues of Nubian slave girls on either end of the bar. Lots
of framed political cartoons, mostly incomprehensible to us.
Rick and I got the daily special, Guinness beef stew with potatoes.
We were only able to eat about half, delicious as it was. Neither
of us is used to facing more than a pound of beef for lunch.
It was indeed a day of closure -- half the places we wanted to
see were closed. We wanted to see the National Library's exhibition,
A Thousand Years of Irish Books, but it was closed for the bank
holiday. (Nobody could quite explain what a bank holiday was.)
We did walk by a plaque identifying the house where Bram Stoker
lived, and looked into Neary's Pub, which is featured in _Ulysses_.
We walked a winding way to St. Patrick's Cathedral, where Jonathan
Swift was dean in the last years of his life. It's the largest
church in Ireland, full of statues and plaques and a few genuine
curiosities. They have casts of the skulls of both Swift and
his perhaps-mistress, who are buried above the south nave together.
When phrenology was going strong, some "scientists" got
permission to exhume them and take casts of their skulls. There's
a Reconciliation Door, a thick old thing with a hole chopped
in the center. Two families were feuding, and one of them took
shelter in a house. The rival leader shouted that he was tired
of the fighting; they should call it quits. To prove his sincerity,
he chopped a hole in the door and stuck his bare arm through.
Then we walked down across the Liffey to St. Michen's to see
the mummies that inspired Bram Stoker to write _Dracula_. Closed;
evidently mummies don't have to work on bank holidays.
Right down the street was the Jameson Distillery and Whiskey
Museum. Interesting tour explaining the complex history of Irish
whiskey, and the less complex business of manufacturing it. (The
basic difference between Irish whiskey and Scotch whisky, besides
the spelling, is that after the grain has been partially sprouted
and milled, it's roasted. The Irish use an isolated heating chamber
for this, and the Scots use one that allows the smoke to flavor
the stuff.) We wound up in the Jameson bar, where we all were
given a generous sample, worth the £3.50 it cost to get
in. They had more exotic whiskies for sale, though, and I had
to try the most expensive, Middleton Very Rare, at £6 the
ounce (about $7.25). It was worth it, as complex and light as
a good Armagnac.
We came back to the hotel and wound up sitting in the pub with
Rick and his family and most of the students, eating pub grub
and chatting until a decent hour.
9 Aug. -- Limerick
We went downstairs at 6:30 to see off the students, and then
I wrote for awhile more (having been up for a couple of hours)
and then took a stroll, looking for a cash machine. Went up O'Connor
Avenue and walked around the statue of O'Connor. He's guarded
by four impressive bronze angels, one of whom has a bullet hole
in her breast, from the 1916 revolution.
We got on the train to Limerick at 10:00, knowing from a couple
of weeks ago that the service would be lousy. So we took aboard
ample rations and enjoyed a pleasant two-hour ride. We were all
bus-ed out, several hours a day for more than a week, so even
an ordinary train was a real treat.
We settled into the hotel, then scarfed some pub grub and went
to King John's Castle, which is more than King John ever did.
(He was granted a charter to Limerick, but never felt compelled
to go there.) This is the nasty King John of Robin Hood fame,
a wastrel wanker by tradition, though modern historians have
redeemed him somewhat. (When he did visit Ireland as a young
prince, he yanked on the beards of clan chieftains, an endearing
gesture.)
The castle is about 90% tourism and 10% active archeology. There
are steel mesh walkways over the areas that are being excavated,
with short recorded explanations of what's where. That was the
best part, much of it concerning a pre-Norman fort that provided
the foundation for the Castle.
There are a couple of multimedia presentations that were not
too clear, I guess because they're aimed at Irish schoolchildren,
who already know a lot of the backstory.
The castle itself is a pretty well preserved 800-year-old building,
without too much to distinguish it from any other medieval castle.
In the 1930's a bunch of public housing was built in the courtyard,
which is pretty exotic. They were torn down fifty years later,
to make way for tourism.
We enjoyed sitting around the peat fires in the new/old courtyard,
the smell of the burning turf appropriately ancient. I was interested
in the different battle positions for longbowmen and crossbow
marksmen. The longbowmen weren't as accurate, but they could
shoot downwards, a position that was precarious for the crossbow.
So they had slots as tall as a man to shoot through -- down,
level, or up. The crossbow windows were small and the proper
height for a marksman to crouch and aim slightly down.
There was a recreation of the mint that once was in the castle
basement, with an affable gent hammering out souvenir coins of
aluminum while answering questions, mostly from fascinated children.
Ireland only had its own coinage for a short period back then,
I suspect because John wanted his face on a coin. Most of Ireland
was rural, without even towns in the usual sense, just clusters
of family and extended family. They were self-sufficient and
when they "bought" something from outside, they bartered.
If you went into an actual town or city, you could buy things
with coins from any number of countries; it was the weight of
silver or gold in the coin, rather than its provenance, that
determined its value.
Leaving the castle, we decided not to further torture our feet
with another museum, and followed a 12-year-old's directions
to the nearest cybercafe. Their Microsoft 2000 was too modern
to read my Word 5.1 disk, or so they said. I suspect there was
a work-around that any actual computer jock could do in seconds.
But I'm a Mac guy. I don't do windows. So I just answered some
email fan mail and kept this for America, or maybe Shannon airport,
which might have more tractable machines.
Odd dinner. We chose a restaurant that Rick had seen earlier,
which had a variety of simple chow suitable for a nine-year old,
but also regular food. We checked the menu in the window and
went upstairs -- where the waitress informed us that starting
tonight, they were a Thai restaurant! They hadn't had a chance
to change the window display.
Everybody was dog-tired, though, and there were a couple of things
on the menu that Samantha could tolerate, so we sat down to beta-test
this new restaurant. I ordered a fairly good bottle of white
wine, and it came out warm, which was a portent. The food took
forever to come, but that gave me a chance to have the ice refreshed
in the wine server three times, so after a half- hour it was
drinkable. The food did turn out to be good, my own madamas curry
satisfyingly hot, but it took another half-hour for everything
to come out, one plate at a time. Samantha was dozing before
the last dinner came. But she suddenly had 220-volt enthusiasm
when Gay suggested they go find Double Magnum bars for desert.
(That's a rich vanilla ice cream bar that's dipped in chocolate,
and then caramel, and then chocolate again.)
Next morning now; only a few more hours in Ireland. Good writing
day, 600 words besides half of this account. Off to Shannon.
Joe
10 Aug -- Tampa
Nineteen hours from the hotel in Limerick to the one in Tampa.
The Newark airport is purgatory, if not hell. CONSUMER ALERT:
If you have connections through Newark after Labor Day, change
them. That's the day they start renovating the Toonerville Trolley
that gets you, sometimes, from one place to another. It's going
to be chaos.
The flight over was all right. I read about half of Gardner's "Best
of," and there are some really fine stories in there. Greg
Egan is, as always, awesome. Silverberg scores high, too, and
Eleanor Arneson, James Patrick Kelly, M. John Harrison, Chris
Lawson, Fred Pohl.
We saw the heart-tranplant romance, _Return to Me_, sappy but
sweet. It would have been more interesting to make a darker story
of romantic compulsion, where the woman who receives the heart
of the man's wife tracks him down and initiates a love affair
fueled by survivor guilt. Instead of a silly chain of impossible
coincidences and mysterious heart-cleaving- unto heart bullshit.
Wouldn't sell popcorn, I guess.
Driving the two hours home in a little bit. We didn't want to
drive last night, after being on the plane all day, so we holed
up at old faithful, Hampton Inn.
It's good to be back in the States, but we loved Ireland. The
people as much as the land. Gentle, generous, easygoing. One
could live there.
Joe McCoy Haldeman
Note sophisticated pinky extension ....